Friday, February 21, 2025

All the Beauty in the World

All the Beauty in the World: The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Me by Patrick Bringley

Interesting ture story of Patrick, he was working at the New Yorker when his brother passed away after a prolonged illness. Wanting a job that was completely different from his previous experience, he took a job working as a security guard at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He stayed at this job for ten years, and this is the story of what that experience was like to go to work everyday and to be surrounded with the best art and artifacts in the world. During the ten years his life went through many changes, and there are many stories of his fellow employees and the museum patrons. Original to say the least.

Monday, February 17, 2025

Be Ready When the Luck Happens

Be Ready When the Luck Happens: A Memoir by Ina Garten

This memoir by Ina is more interesting than I had expected. The titles reflects her life in food perfectly. She never went to cooking school or worked as a commvercial chef. She followed her instincts and went from specialty food shop owner to caterer to cook book writer to television chef.

Friday, February 14, 2025

Paris Undercover

Paris Undercover: A Wartime Story of Courage, Friendship, and Betrayal by Matthew Goodman

The story of two women, an American and a Parisian, who were living in Paris when WW2 broke out and of course the Nazis occupied the city. The got involved in helping Allied troops trapped in France try to escape, and this went very wrong at one point. A unique true story of the war, which has so many stories that tend to be the same rote tales.

Friday, February 7, 2025

The Plot: A Novel and The Sequel

The Plot: A Novel and The Sequel by Jean Hanff Korelitz

These two novels are a real departure from what I usually read. The are classified as thrillers, so not really mysteries, though there are murders involved. I found them very engaging and enjoyable and they really held my attention. The Sequel is the second part of the novel The Plot. The characters are developed nicely and a big part of both of these is looking at authors and the publishing industry, so a bit of an insider vibe to these, but accessible to anyone who is an avid reader.

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

American Oasis

American Oasis: Finding the Future in the Cities of the Southwest by Kyle Paoletta

This is an extensive history of the populating of the SW US. Going back to Coronodo and Spain and Mexico trying to administer the region, up through the US taking over the region and the founding the major cities; Albaquerque, Tucson, Las Vegas and so on. A great description of the creation of the Colorado Compact that divided up the Colorado river among the states. Many of the things we live with today and their origins.

The Studio

The Studio by John Gregory Dunne

In 1967 Dunne was given complete access to Twentieth Century Fox by Richard Zanuck. This was the year that the movies "Dr. Dolittle," "Planet of the Apes," "Funy Girl" and "The Boston Strangler" were all being filmed and the author had access to the filming and meetings of executives and writers of these. He saw how the publicity machines in the studio worked and all the expectations around these films, some that worked, some that did not. A nice tale if insights into how things worked in the movie industry at the time.

Saturday, January 25, 2025

Box Office Poison

Box Office Poison: A Hilarious and Revealing Journey Through Hollywood's Biggest Blunders with a Surprising Lesson, Discover the Untold Stories of the Film Industry's Most Memorable Failures by Tim Robey

This book tells the story of movies that were flops at the box office, and that cost a fortune. It goes from the silent film era to the present. These are of course not every movie that bombed, but the highlights of the ones have the best stories. Entertaining but does get a bit bogged down at times. Also interesting how the movie industry has changed and how the pandemic has affected movie going. Seems that there will be less expensive flops in the future and the corporations that run the movie business become less risk averse. (Also see 'The Future Was Now' previous post)